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  1. Deborah Compagnoni was born in Bormio, northern Lombardy, and skied with the G.S. Forestale club. [1] Compagnoni soon attracted attention for her great talent. Her career was always marked by major successes, but also by serious accidents. After her first major victory, the World Junior title in giant slalom, and her first podium in World Cup ...

  2. Deborah Compagnoni ( Bormio, 4 giugno 1970) è un'ex sciatrice alpina italiana, prima atleta ad aver vinto una medaglia d'oro in tre diverse edizioni dei Giochi olimpici invernali nella storia dello sci alpino [1] . Nonostante alcuni gravi infortuni subiti in carriera, è stata tra le più vittoriose sciatrici alpine italiane: nel suo palmarès ...

  3. Deborah Compagnoni (* 4. Juni 1970 in Bormio, Provinz Sondrio) ist eine ehemalige italienische Skirennläuferin. Sie ist dreifache Olympiasiegerin, dreifache Weltmeisterin und gewann einmal den Riesenslalom -Weltcup. Somit ist sie die mit Abstand erfolgreichste italienische Skirennläuferin der 1990er Jahre.

  4. Biography. Deborah Compagnoni was the first, and through 2010 remains the only, athlete to have won a gold medal in alpine skiing at three consecutive Winter Olympics. Despite two serious knee ligament injuries she was the most successful female Italian skier ever. She dominated international racing between 1994 and 1998, particularly in the ...

  5. Deborah Compagnoni was the daughter of a ski instructor, and it soon became apparent she had inherited her father’s genes. Aged 17, she claimed gold in the giant slalom at the 1987 World Junior Championships. A year later she suffered the first of many injuries that would plague her career. Injury crisis. In 1988, Compagnoni broke her right ...

  6. Italy's Deborah Compagnoni won the gold medal, Martina Ertl of Germany took the silver, and the bronze medalist was Vreni Schneider of Switzerland. Compagnoni led after the first run, followed by Hilde Gerg of Germany and Wachter; Gerg failed to finish, Wachter was fourth, and Merle was fifth.

  7. Deborah Compagnoni of Italy won the gold medal, Merle took the silver, and Katja Seizinger of Germany was the bronze medalist. Maier was fifth, downhill champion Kerrin Lee-Gartner was sixth, and Zeller was eleventh. The winning margin was 1.41 seconds; through 2018, it remains the largest in the event's Olympic history.